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Royals roll to 5th straight win by beating Angels 7-2

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — A trip to California was all the Kansas City Royals needed to get their offense in gear.

Lorenzo Cain and Alex Gordon hit solo home runs and the Royals picked up their fifth consecutive victory, beating the Los Angeles Angels 7-2 on Thursday night.

The Royals have now scored at least seven runs in each of their last five games, marking only the third such streak in franchise history. The feat was previously accomplished May 25-June 1, 1978 and Aug. 9-12 1979.

The streaking Royals have been getting it done with power, clubbing 14 homers in this unbeaten stretch that began at San Diego, continued in San Francisco and has carried back down to Orange County.

“The offense is just rolling right now,” Gordon said. “It started in San Diego. As an offense, it kind of clicks, and everyone just, you know, tags along.”

Cain hit a line drive that barely cleared the wall in left center in the third inning, and Gordon followed it up with a shot to center in the fourth, his third of the year.

For Gordon, who went 3 for 5 and came up a triple shy of hitting for the cycle, it was especially gratifying. He arrived in California hitting .174, but is 8 for 22 on the trip.

“You try to keep your head up,” Gordon said. “Obviously, you are going to go through struggles in baseball sometimes, and just try to find a way out of it. Hopefully it will keep coming.”

That was more than enough support for Matt Strahm (2-3), who won his first career start after making 41 appearances as a reliever over the past two seasons. Strahm went five innings, striking out three while giving up three hits and one walk.

“It’s the first time we’ve seen him in the windup this year, but he commanded his pitches well,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Ricky Nolasco (2-8) dropped his sixth straight start, giving up five runs and 10 hits in six innings, while the Angels failed to pick up their first three-game winning streak since Mike Trout’s thumb injury.

Kole Calhoun put the Angels ahead 1-0 in the first, scoring an unearned run when Albert Pujols singled to right after initially reaching second on Gordon’s error, but the Royals responded with two runs in the second after a throwing error by Calhoun.

Danny Espinosa of the Angels lost a home run in the fifth when the video replay showed his shot into the corner in left had curled out of play.

The Angels did finally notch their second run an inning later when Yunel Escobar picked up an RBI, only for the Royals to respond with three in the seventh. Mike Moustakas had two RBI, giving him 16 in 13 games this month.

Moustakas’ eruption is indicative of a team-wide trend. The Royals have scored 42 runs in their last five games.

EASY ADJUSTMENT

Considering Strahm’s last start happened in Double-A last July, the second-year left-hander had no apparent issues transitioning from reliever to the first pitcher up.

“I don’t ever feel like I conserve anything,” Strahm said. “Competing every pitch and just try to be as effective as possible with every pitch.”

The plan was to have Strahm throw between 65 and 70 pitches, and he finished at 68. Pitching coach Dave Eiland wanted to have Strahm get up to throw four times, but Yost felt confident in letting him get back up for the fifth.

“Now, hopefully 85 pitches next time,” Strahm said.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: DH Brandon Moss was back in the starting lineup after being limited to three at-bats as a pinch-hitter during interleague play at San Diego and San Francisco. Moss went 1 for 5.

Angels: RHP Matt Shoemaker’s status for his next scheduled start is uncertain after leaving Wednesday’s game against the Yankees with tightness in his forearm. “Historically, he has had these before and they seem like they go away in fairly short order,” manager Mike Scioscia said. “How many days that is remains to be seen.” . Scioscia believes RHP Cam Bedrosian (groin) is “very close” to returning. Bedrosian pitched 2/3 of an inning in a rehab assignment with the Angels’ Single-A affiliate Thursday.

SIGNED, SEALED, STARTING SOON

The Angels have signed first-round draft pick Jordon Adell and the No. 10 overall selection will report to the club’s rookie ball affiliate in Arizona next Wednesday.

“For me, it was a no-brainer,” Adell said. “This organization believed in me and it was easy. I didn’t want to waste any time. I wanted to get right to work.”

Adell led the nation with 25 home runs last season for Ballard High School in Louisville, Kentucky.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Ian Kennedy (0-6) has given up at least four runs in each of his last six starts. The Huntington Beach native and former USC star is unlikely to find any home-cooking against the Angels, with an 0-4 record in six career starts.

Angels: RHP Jesse Chavez (5-6) has allowed a home run in 11 straight appearances to set a franchise record. Chavez dropped his only previous start against the Royals in 2015.

— Associated Press —

St. Joseph split doubleheader at home against Ozark

The St. Joseph Mustangs split a doubleheader at home Thursday against Ozark, winning game one 4-2 before losing the nightcap 6-5.

St. Joe’s collegiate summer baseball team is now 12-5 and 9-5 in the MINK League.

In game one, the Mustangs scored single runs in each of the first four innings to take a 4-0 lead, and it stayed that way until the top of the seventh inning.

Ozark scored twice in the seventh but that was all they’d get as St. Joseph’s Michael Lydon-Lorson threw a complete game to get the win. He allowed two runs on four hits and is now 3-0 this season.

Easton Fortuna and Josh William each had two hits and an RBI to lead the Mustangs, while Pat Dillon also drove in a run.

In game two, St. Joseph and Ozark were tied 2-2 until the seventh inning before the Generals scored four runs to take control of the game.

The Mustangs rallied with three runs of their own in the bottom of the seventh to pull within one run, but they fell short of a sweep.

John Millan suffered his first loss of the season as he allowed six runs on five hits in 6.1 innings of work.

Brett Marr led St. Joe’s six-hit attack as he finished 2-for-4 with two runs scored. Drew Standifer tripled and drove in three runs.

The Mustangs are back at home Friday night as they host Ozark in the final game of their three-game series. The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. inside Phil Welch Stadium.

St. Louis drops series finale to Milwaukee 6-4

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Keon Broxton and Eric Thames homered to lift the Milwaukee Brewers to a 6-4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday night.

Thames’ 18th of the season off Cardinals closer Seung Hwan Oh (1-3) in the ninth barely skimmed over the right field wall and broke a 4-4 tie as the Brewers won their second straight series against the Cardinals. Milwaukee had gone 0-15-2 in the previous 17 series.

Broxton drilled the first pitch he saw 489 feet into the left field seats to tie the game 2-2 in the second. It is the longest home run in Busch Stadium III’s history and the second-longest this season in the major leagues.

Domingo Santana’s single scored Eric Sogard to give the Brewers a 3-2 lead in the third.

For the second consecutive start, Brewers right-hander Zach Davies gave up four runs in five innings. He gave up nine hits and struck out one.

Oliver Drake earned his first career save for the Brewers. Josh Hader and Carlos Torres (3-4) combined for three scoreless innings of relief.

Stephen Piscotty and Aledmys Diaz had RBI singles to give the Cardinals a 2-0 lead in the first.

Dexter Fowler tied it for the Cardinals with a solo home run in the third and again with a single scoring Matt Carpenter in the fifth.

Carpenter doubled in the first and fifth, scoring both times. He has doubled in six straight games.

Michael Wacha struggled again, giving up four runs in four innings. It is the fourth of his last five starts that the Cardinals right-hander failed to go five innings.

MISSED OPPORTUNITY

The Brewers had bases loaded with no outs in the fifth, but only scored once on a single by Travis Shaw. Thames was thrown out at home trying to score from second on Shaw’s hit and Santana was thrown out at home on a safety squeeze.

PINBALL WIZARD

Yadier Molina was retired on a rare 3-4-1 play in the eighth. His grounder went off Thames’ glove, but Sogard barehanded the deflection and threw to Torres to get Molina at first.

FACES IN THE CROWD

Actor and comedian George Lopez was on the field during batting practice interviewing players on their superstitions for a segment in his upcoming show.

TRAINING ROOM

Brewers: OF Ryan Braun (left calf strain) fielded balls in left field during batting practice, but there is no timetable for a return.

Cardinals: INF Paul DeJong was recalled from Triple-A Memphis and 2B Kolten Wong (right triceps strain) was placed on the 10-day DL.

UP NEXT

Brewers: RHP Junior Guerra (1-1, 2.45 ERA) will make his sixth start as the team returns home for a three-game set against San Diego and RHP Miguel Diaz (1-1, 6.92 ERA). He is 1-1 with a 3.60 ERA in two career starts against the Padres.

Cardinals: RHP Carlos Martinez (5-5, 2.95 ERA) will kick off a three-game series at Baltimore and RHP Kevin Gausman (3-5, 6.49 ERA). His 1.93 Interleague ERA is the fifth-lowest in MLB history (minimum eight starts).

— Associated Press —

Mustangs finish road trip with 8-5 win at Joplin

The St. Joseph Mustangs wrapped up their five-game road trip Wednesday with an 8-5 victory at Joplin.

St. Joe’s collegiate summer baseball team went 3-2 on their road trip as they’re now 11-4 this season and 8-4 in the MINK League.

The Mustangs raced out to a quick lead as they scored five runs in the first inning and held off a late Joplin rally.

The Outlaws scored two runs in the seventh inning to pull within 6-5 before St. Joseph pulled away in the top of the ninth with two runs of their own.

Drew Standifer and Jacob Richardson led the Mustangs offense with two hits each, while Jeremiah Figueroa drove in three runs.

St. Joe starter Josh Monson earned the win as he allowed three runs on five hits in five innings of work. Kyle Uhrich threw a scoreless ninth for his fourth save of the season.

The Mustangs return home to Phil Welch Stadium Thursday as they play a doubleheader against Ozark. The first pitch of game one is set for 5:30 p.m.

Royals sweep San Francisco, extend win streak to four

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Royals slugger Mike Moustakas didn’t care to get caught up in a debate concerning whether or not his latest home run landed in the waters of McCovey Cove.

With Kansas City finally finding a comfortable groove after a rocky start to the season, Moustakas is thinking big picture.

Moustakas hit his 18th home run leading off the second inning, Jorge Bonifacio and Lorenzo Cain followed with back-to-back shots in the third and the Royals beat the San Francisco Giants 7-2 on Wednesday to complete a two-game sweep.

The win was Kansas City’s fourth straight and left the Royals at 30-34 — not bad for a ballclub that was nine games under .500 one month into the season.

“We’re trending in the right direction,” Moustakas said. “We’ve been playing great baseball on this road trip and if we keep this going we’re going to be in a good spot after the end of this month.”

Moustakas, one of Kansas City’s top hitters over the past two weeks, stayed hot with his home run off former Royals pitcher Johnny Cueto (5-6) that initially appeared to land in McCovey Cove. Officials later determined that the ball landed on a walkway and bounced into the water.

It was the fifth homer in 12 games for Moustakas, who is already just four shy of his career-high.

“It’s all good, a homer’s a homer,” Moustakas said.

Bonifacio finished with two hits and three RBI, Whit Merrifield added three hits and three runs while Alcides Escobar singled three times to help Jason Hammel end an eight-game winless stretch on the road that dated to 2016.

Hammel (3-6) allowed one run over 6 2/3 innings to beat the Giants for the first time in 12 starts. The right-hander gave up eight hits, struck out four and walked one.

“He commanded the ball really well, he changed speeds, he used his slider effectively, got some big swings and misses,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “His last couple of starts, he’s really come on for us.”

Bonifacio homered in the third after Merrifield opened the inning with a bunt single. Two pitches later, Cain lined an 0-1 pitch over the fence in left-center that put the Royals up 4-0.

Cueto struggled in his first appearance against his former team since signing with San Francisco after helping Kansas City to the 2015 World Series. He allowed five runs and 10 hits over 5 2/3 innings with three walks and five strikeouts.

Kansas City has scored seven or more runs in each of its last four games, all wins.

Eduardo Nunez had two hits and an RBI for San Francisco. The Giants have lost 11 of 15.

San Francisco had two on and two outs twice but failed to score each time. Hammel fanned Brandon Crawford to end the fourth and reliever Peter Moylan got Buster Posey to ground out to end the seventh.

“The way we’re swinging, it’s a steep climb,” San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy said. “This is humbling to go through something like this. It’s a tough time for these fellows.”

WALKED OFF

Brandon Belt’s walk in the seventh inning was the first free pass issued by Hammel since May 29. It also was the last batter the right-hander faced, as Yost came scurrying out of the dugout to replace him with Moylan. Hammel hardly resisted. “I don’t ever want to say I was getting tired but that inning the pitches were up,” he said. “Probably the right move there.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Giants: 2B Joe Panik returned to the lineup after being sidelined for four games with a sprained left thumb he injured last week in Milwaukee diving for a ground ball. He went 2 for 4.

UP NEXT

Royals: LHP Matt Strahm (1-3, 4.05) makes his first career start Thursday in Anaheim against the Angels. Strahm has made 20 appearances out of the bullpen this season.

Giants: LHP Matt Moore (2-7, 5.28) faces the Rockies for the third time this season when the teams play at Colorado in the opener of a four-game series Thursday. Moore is winless in his previous five starts.

— Associated Press —

Mustangs split a doubleheader at Ozark

The St. Joseph Mustangs split a doubleheader at Ozark Tuesday, winning game one 2-1 before falling in the nightcap 6-1.

St. Joe’s collegiate summer baseball team is now 10-4 this season and 7-4 in the MINK League.

In game one, Drew Standifer and Louis Mele each drove in a run in the fourth inning to put the Mustangs up 2-0 and that was all the St. Joseph pitch staff would need.

Osvaldo Raya is now 3-0 this summer as he allowed one run on seven hits in five innings of work. Nikko Pablo threw 1.2 scoreless innings and Kyle Uhrich got the final out of the game for his third save of the season.

In game two, the Mustangs scored one run in the top of the first inning, but that was all they’d get. Ozark tied the game in the bottom of the first and then broke the game open with three runs in the fourth and two more in the fifth inning.

Matt Diaz suffered the loss as he went 4.2 innings and allowed four earned runs on seven hits.

St. Joe had only four singles in the game. Mele had two hits and drove in the only run.

The Mustangs wrap up their five-game road trip Wednesday as they play at Joplin. The first pitch is at 7:00 p.m. inside Joe Becker Stadium.

Vargas gets ninth win as Royals defeat San Francisco 8-1

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Alcides Escobar hit a two-run double as part of a six-run sixth inning and the Kansas City Royals beat the San Francisco Giants 8-1 on Tuesday night.

Jorge Bonifacio drove in three runs and snapped an 0-for-13 drought, Alex Gordon added two hits and two runs, while Whit Merrifield had a bases-loaded triple to help Kansas City to a win in its first appearance at AT&T Park since the 2014 World Series.

Jason Vargas (9-3) allowed one run over seven innings to outpitch Ty Blach in a battle of left-handers. Vargas gave up five hits with six strikeouts and one walk for his fourth straight win overall and second against the Giants this season.

Buster Posey had two hits and scored San Francisco’s run. The Giants have lost 10 of 14.

Escobar, whose leadoff single in the third sparked a two-run rally, broke the game open with a bases-loaded double off Blach (4-4) in the sixth. After Gordon was intentionally walked and Vargas struck out, Merrifield lofted a fly ball that landed past sliding right fielder Hunter Pence near the foul line to put the Royals up 7-1. Bonifacio followed with an RBI single.

That was more than enough for Vargas, who pitched seven scoreless innings to beat the Giants in Kansas City on April 19.

Coming off its best offensive game of the season two days earlier, San Francisco struggled against Vargas and reliever Travis Wood. The Giants were limited to five hits and scored their only run on a sacrifice fly after Posey doubled leading off the second.

Blach allowed seven runs and 10 hits over 5 1/3 innings. He struck out four and walked one.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy (right oblique strain) threw 20 pitches in a bullpen session Monday and came out of it with no lingering pain. Duffy has been out since May 29.

Giants: With a left-hander pitching, 2B Joe Panik was given an additional day off to rest his sprained left thumb. Aaron Hill started in Panik’s place.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Jason Hammel (2-6, 5.43) pitches in the finale of this two-game series. Hammel is winless in his previous eight road starts dating to 2016.

Giants: RHP Johnny Cueto (5-5, 4.33) faces his former team for the first time since signing with San Francisco after helping Kansas City to the 2015 World Series.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals blank Milwaukee in opener, lose game two 8-5

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Milwaukee Brewers third baseman Travis Shaw may have looked locked in Tuesday night, but his mind was hundreds of miles away.

Keon Broxton and Shaw hit solo home runs and combined for five RBI to help the Brewers beat the St. Louis Cardinals 8-5 and split their day-night doubleheader.

The Cardinals won the opener 6-0 behind Jose Martinez’s two home runs.

In the nightcap, Shaw’s eighth-inning single against Trevor Rosenthal (1-3) broke a 5-5 tie. Shaw, who was reinstated from a family medical emergency before the doubleheader, went 2 for 5 in the second game and drove in two runs.

Shaw left the club Friday after his newborn daughter, Ryann, had complications from open heart surgery. She’s in stable condition now.

“It’s nice to get back, at the same time my mind’s still elsewhere,” Shaw said. “There’s more important things than baseball and a lot of things got put in perspective last week. It was nice to get a win, nice to contribute, but I’m still thinking about her at home.”

Brewers right-hander Jimmy Nelson went 5 2/3 innings, but is still winless in 11 career games (10 starts) against the Cardinals. He gave up nine hits, two walks and struck out four.

Jared Hughes (2-1) got the decision after giving up a game-tying homer to Matt Carpenter. Corey Knebel earned his ninth save in 12 opportunities.

Back-to-back homers by Aguilar and Shaw sparked a four-run Brewers fourth. Broxton followed with an RBI triple and scored on a fielder’s choice giving Milwaukee a 5-2 lead.

Broxton’s line drive home run to lead off the third was the Brewers’ first hit of the game. His sacrifice fly capped Milwaukee’s three-run eighth.

“It wasn’t the biggest number we’ve put on the board but it was the best offensive game we’ve had this year for sure,” Brewers manager Craig Counsell said. “The eighth inning was great at-bats up and down the lineup.”

Broxton is hitting .583 (7 for 12) with two homers and five RBI at Busch Stadium this season.

“I think this park, I just kind of find my stroke whenever I get here,” Broxton said. “I don’t’ know what it is. Timing I guess. I just try to keep things as simple as possible. Just see the ball.”

Marco Gonzales lasted just 3 1/3 innings in making his first start since Sept. 1, 2015 after missing all of 2016 with Tommy John surgery. Three of the five hits he gave up were homers.

All four batters Rosenthal faced reached base and three scored, his worst outing since June 24, 2016, when he also gave up three runs without an out against Seattle.

“I feel like I’m pretty good about just showing up every day and giving it my best and that’s what it’s all about, but it’s always tough just being in that spot,” Rosenthal said. “It definitely stinks to be able to not get the job done.”

After Martinez’s RBI fielder’s choice gave the Cardinals the lead in the first, Carpenter made it 2-0 with an RBI single in the second.

Dexter Fowler’s two-out pinch-hit single in the sixth scored Aledmys Diaz and Carpenter led off the seventh with a homer to tie it 5-5.

In the opener, Martinez’s 415-foot opposite field drive to right-center ignited a three-run Cardinals rally in the fifth. Carpenter followed with an RBI double and scored on Fowler’s single to make it 3-0.

Right-hander Lance Lynn (5-3) struggled with his control with four walks, but was able to get out of a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the fifth. Lynn struck out eight, including the side in the fourth inning and Tyler Lyons pitched the final three innings of the opener to earn his first career save.

SAVE THAT BALL

Lewis Brinson legged out his first major league hit in the nightcap when Greg Garcia couldn’t bare-hand his slow roller down the third base line in the third. Brinson was hitless in his first seven at-bats with the Brewers.

“You take it,” Counsell said. “How they come, who cares?”

TRAINING ROOM

Brewers: RHP Brandon Woodruff (right hamstring tightness) was placed on the 10-day DL and RHP Paolo Espino was recalled from Triple-A Oklahoma City.

Cardinals: RHP Sam Tuivailala was recalled from Triple-A Memphis, INF Jhonny Peralta was given his unconditional release and INF Paul DeJong was optioned to Memphis.

UP NEXT

Brewers: RHP Zach Davies (7-3, 4.74 ERA) has won seven of his last eight decisions. He is 2-0 with a 2.81 ERA in five career starts against St. Louis.

Cardinals: RHP Mike Leake (5-5, 2.70 ERA) has given up 11 runs over his last three starts after given up 13 over his first nine. He is 5-4 with a 4.21 ERA in 14 career starts.

— Associated Press —

St. Joseph gets a two-hit shutout victory at Joplin Monday

The St. Joseph Mustangs bounced back from a walk-off loss Sunday at Nevada to defeat Joplin 8-0 on the road Monday at Joe Becker Stadium.

The Mustangs improve to 9-3 this season and 6-3 in the MINK League.

St. Joseph’s pitching staff limited the Outlaws to just two hits on the night. Starter Steve D’Amico threw seven scoreless innings as he struck out 13 batters and walked four. Eleazar Rojas and Billy Olsen each threw one scoreless inning of relief to cap off the win.

Kyle Uhrich homered and drove in three to lead the Mustangs’ 14-hit attack. Brody Santilli, Brady Anderson, Josh Williams and Brett Marr added two hits each.

St. Joseph travels to Ozark Tuesday for a doubleheader against the Generals. The first pitch of game one is set for 5:30 p.m.

Mizzou’s Houck taken in first round of MLB Draft by Red Sox

NEW YORK – Mizzou Baseball junior RHP Tanner Houck (Collinsville, Ill.) became the program’s seventh first round draft pick as he was selected 24th overall by the Boston Red Sox in the first round of the 2017 Major League Baseball First Year Player Draft Monday. Houck is the highest-drafted Mizzou player since Kyle Gibson went 22nd overall in 2009.

Of Mizzou’s seven first round draft picks, four have come since 2006 after Houck’s selection Monday. Houck had arguably the most productive three-year career of any pitcher to come through Mizzou’s program. He finishes his career ranked fourth in school history in career strikeouts (292), a mark that ranks second among three-year players. Houck threw 300.2 innings during his three seasons, becoming just the second Mizzou player ever to throw 300+ innings in his first three seasons. He showed tremendous durability over his Mizzou career, pitching through 6.0 innings in 37 of 44 career starts, 7.0 innings in 24 and 8.0 innings in 13 starts.

Houck is coming off a junior season during which he allowed career lows in hits (78), extra-base hits (22), homers (five), triples (one) and earned runs (35). He finishes his Mizzou career with 17 wins, a 3.26 ERA and 292 strikeouts. He limited batters to just .220 hitting throughout his career.

Several other Mizzou players hope to hear their names called as the MLB Draft continues this week. Rounds 3-10 will be Tuesday while rounds 11-40 will be Wednesday.

— Mizzou Athletics —

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